Shisei-Kan Kyoto University of Art and Design
2-116 Kitashirakawauryuzan, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto-shi, Kyoto, Japan
2008.03
University
5,002m2
Our principle for the design of art schools was that the architecture must lift up the students’ spirits. Nowadays, we see lots of dry, dispiriting school buildings perhaps because there were requests for the buildings that are easy for maintenance. In order to counter such tendency, the new building for Kyoto University of Art and Design must have shown something new.
However, the project turned out to be extremely difficult. The first challenge was its site, which was almost a cliff. To build a big-scale building in this environment seemed technically impossible. The architecture came into being with the idea from our structural engineer, Mr Norihide Imamura, that the 67-strong earth anchors would link the cliff and the building. The second task was that since this new building stands at the core of all activities in the campus, it had to be a place to smoothen the flow of various logistics in and around. Rather than designing a new solid object, which is a commonly-observed method in such project, our concept was that the architecture itself could be made flexible to play different roles, such as a bridge, slope or a hole. Same approach was applied for the façade of the building. Our neighboring building, Ningenkan, was a massive stone-clad building. If we had repeated the same pattern for Shiseikan, the impact of our neighbor’s colonnade would have been ruined. So while avoiding colonnades, we attempted to preserve the force and coarseness of the stone. Triple-stacking of pure granite (25cm×60cm×4.5m) at the south and was an unprecedented detail, but responded well to the colonnade of Ningenkan, and the stone pillars to the west, with the passages in between, became visually effective as the view from Shirakawa-Dori, strong enough to be the symbol of the university yet delicate as if it could naturally fuse into its landscape, which is designated as a scenic preservation area. Students tend to vacillate between opting for ‘heaviness’ or ‘lightness’ in architecture. We wanted to encourage them by taking the third way.
In this way, we abandoned the style of ‘wholeness’ of classical architecture by proposing a design that thoroughly ‘compromises’ with our neighboring environment.
京都造形芸術大学 至誠館
京都府京都市左京区北白川瓜生山2-116
2008.03
大学
5,002m2
京都造形芸術大学は、東山のふもと、崖にはりついてユニークなキャンパス計画で知られる。崖に沿って校舎が増え、与えられた敷地に与条件のヴォリューム、機能をおさまるとは到底思えず、絶望的にすらなった。
東は崖、西は人間館の列柱、北は赤レンガ校舎、南は墓地で、さらにキャンパス内のメイン道路を内部に貫通させるという与条件に対し、われわれは建築の古典的全体性を放棄して、それぞれの「隣人=境界条件」に対して、徹底して「負ける」デザインを選択した。崖に対しては、崖と建築を緊結する解法をとり、構造家今川憲英氏の発案による永久斜めアースアンカー67本による固定という、他にあまり例のない工法で臨んだ。西側には外部階段「天に翔ける階段」を配して、キャンパス内のレベル差を一気に解消する動線とすると同時に、階段上部に不整形にヴォリュームをはり出し、必要機能をアドホックに収容した。敷地内道路も建築の内部を貫通させ、この建築を作ることで、キャンパスを分断するのではなく、逆に建築内部の「孔」によってキャンパスの分断を解消される方法をとった。南側は御影石の無垢の塊(25cm×60cmx4.5m)を3段積みにするという前例のないディテールで、隣接する人間館の石貼り列柱のリズムに答えた。屋上は樹木を植え緑化して、東山の緑の連続性を確保した。これらの操作の結果生じるカオティックな多様性、すなわち各階プランの非連続性を、45度にふれたワッフルスラブの構造体によって、一気に無柱空間として解いてしまうとしたのである。
そのようにして、すべての境界条件に対して「連続」(負けて)でありながら、それゆえに全体としては不連続であるという、現代的なコンポジションが逆説的に出現した。このような連続性と非連続性の共存は、京都造形芸術大学の目指す、新しい教育の方向性とも一致するように思えた。






